Answer:
The person becomes the scapegoat and will be stoned to death.
Explanation:
"The Lottery" was a short story written by Shirley Johnson in which she pictures a certain fictional town in contemporary America where there is an annual ritual through which bad people are removed from the town through lottery. The person selected through lottery is stoned to death.
It is an annual ritual which they believe guarantees good harvest. It was a tradition they followed blindly and nobody ever questions the rational or the person becomes "The Lottery".
I believe "Building" is the Subject and I believe either "Stood" or "Island" is the predicate.
The correct answer should be nature.
Early romantics such as Wordsworth and Coleridge believed in imagination that exists after being enveloped in nature which is why they often took walks or went to picnics or similar.
Answer:
Why is she reading a book?
Explanation:
QW = question word (a word that introduces a question, why)
Aux = auxiliary verb (is, part of is reading)
subject = she
verb = (is) reading
object = a book
When Collier uses the metaphor in paragraph 4, what she means is:
D. being poor limited their opportunities in life.
- "Marigolds" is a short story by author Eugenia W. Collier (born in Baltimore in 1928). The narrator is Lizabeth, and the story is set during the Great Depression.
- The<u> fourth paragraph</u> of the story provides a sad description of Lizabeth's reality growing up during the Depression. She talks about her poor neighborhood and how poverty was like a cage for them.
- The narrator uses that metaphor to summarize what she said previously in the paragraph. Being poor meant not only being hungry, but also being culturally deprived.
- She and the other children had no access to information, <u>did not understand </u>the reason of the extent of their poverty.
- Without proper food, education, and opportunities, they were condemned to remain poor.
- In conclusion, letter D is the best option to explain the metaphor, since poverty meant deprivation of opportunities for Lizabeth and the others.
Learn more about the story here:
brainly.com/question/17514315?referrer=searchResults